What "web development company" should mean for a Sylhet build with real moving parts
A web development company in Sylhet that actually develops — engineers the working parts, not just decorates the front.
There's a quiet reason "web development" and "web design" are separate searches in Sylhet, and the people typing "web development company sylhet" usually already know it. They don't need a layout — they need something that does a job. A travel and umrah agent in Zindabazar wants a booking flow that takes a deposit and emails them the lead, not a static price list. A property firm in Uposhohor selling flats and land to probashis wants a real listing with filters by area, price and bedrooms, that the buyer's family abroad can browse at midnight. A clinic wants appointments; a school wants admissions; a restaurant chain wants online orders going to the right branch. That is development work — backend logic, forms that actually fire, payment and integration plumbing — and it is exactly where the recoloured-template shops fall apart, because there was never any real engineering under the paint.
Sylhet makes the stakes higher than almost anywhere else in the country, because so much of the money and the deciding sits abroad. The remittance economy here means your buyer is frequently a probashi son or brother in London, Birmingham or New York — often someone who works in tech or uses good software all day — and the thing they're buying is rarely a coffee. It's an umrah package, a flat, a plot of land, a year's school admission. When that person opens your site at midnight their time on a fast connection and the booking form silently dies, the SSL padlock is broken, or the listing filter throws an error, you don't just look dated. You lose a high-value sale to the one person with the budget and the final say. A web development company that can't make the working parts actually work is worse than useless here — it costs you the buyers who matter most.
When you hire me, "company" is one accountable senior developer the whole way through. The person you brief on the first WhatsApp message scopes the build, writes the backend, wires the booking and bKash flows, tests them on a real Sylhet line and from the fast connection a probashi viewer uses, and answers when something needs changing six months later. No salesman who wins the work and vanishes, no project manager forwarding your messages, no junior with under two years of experience quietly inheriting the trickiest part of your build because he was the one free that week. On a development brief — where one badly-wired payment step or one broken query can sink the whole thing — that single point of accountability is the entire reason a solo developer out-ships a named firm. Nothing breaks in a handoff, because there is no handoff, and the code stays clean enough that any developer after me can pick it up.
Pricing is fixed and honest, and it's scoped to what you're actually building, not padded with a logo and a meeting room. 50,000 BDT is the floor — a focused business site, the pages that get you found and bring the enquiry in. 90,000 BDT adds custom illustration, a blog and stronger SEO. 1,50,000 BDT covers a full small-business site, bilingual Bangla-English where it earns its place, with a basic booking or shop flow wired in. Genuinely custom development — a real booking engine, a property listing system, a member portal, a dashboard, heavier integrations — starts from 3,00,000 BDT, because that's real software and I won't pretend otherwise to win the job. Always 50% advance and 50% on launch via bKash, Nagad or bank transfer, and you approve the full design before any code is written. If your honest budget is under 50,000 BDT, I'll tell you on the first call and point you to a real template option instead of selling you thin work and calling it development.
See pricing in BDT